More Zen

I’ve waxed rhapsodic about many things in this space. Typically, those magical places and activities and sights have all been related to wilderness, the outdoors — and usually the ocean, sailing and surfing.

But there’s another part of my life that often provides more peace and joy than any other. And people are usually shocked when I say: “Hockey is the most Zen thing in my life.”

It’s true, especially this winter where there’s been so little surf and even less wilderness time. Instead, my weekly Friday-night skates in Exeter, New Hampshire, have been an exercise in pure ecstatic expression.

I’m not a particularly good hockey player but I know what’s going on during the game. And that’s the ultimate source of the Zen-like state I achieve while playing: that in-the-moment existence where the mind is silent and the body just acts and reacts to what’s going on around it. When I’m skating (especially with a high-quality group like the one in Exeter), that internal mental dialogue that’s prevalent 24/7 in the human mind goes silent. The discussion ceases and that pure animal mind takes over. It’s an all-too-brief bit of quiet that I cherish.

I first got into yoga after reading a book by Ram Dass in which he pointed out that if you were a really active person then seated meditation was going against your true nature and wouldn’t be effective (at least at first). He recommended active meditations such as yoga, whirling and dance as a more appropriate entry point to seeking awakening for such people. I would offer that dancing on skates on ice, chasing a little rubber disc, has been the method by which I’ve gotten closest to an awakened state. The great thing is: it’s a never-ending quest and I look forward to “meditating” at the hockey rink for the rest of my life.

This Post Has No Title (Or Point)

OK, so, it’s been four months and a couple of weeks since I last posted here on Terrastomper. I’d like to say that’s because I’ve been too busy actually stompin’ on the terra, but alas, that wouldn’t be honest. So what HAVE I been doing since I returned from Europe (since I obviously haven’t been writing)? Here’s a brief recap:

* Looked at a few sailboats here in the U.S. Seeing such boats before they got sold (as had some others I’d been watching) was the main reason I returned from Europe. And I even got into negotiations on one boat, which I bailed on in early December. But now with spring approaching (not that we’ve had any winter here in New England), I’ve resumed my search for a boat of my own.
* Attended the U.S. Sailboat Show and took a marine-weather course at the Annapolis School of Seamanship. I also spent three days learning how to kiteboard on the Outer Banks in North Carolina.
* Took an apartment in Newburyport, Massachusetts, five minutes from my folks and my family home on Plum Island.
* Spent a couple of weeks in the U.K. in late November and early December getting a Day Skipper certification from the Royal Yachting Association. In the process, I got to sail in the Solent, perhaps the yachting center of the world.
* Been playing a lot of hockey — skating at lunchtime in Newburyport and Friday evenings with some really good players in Exeter, N.H. — and hitting the local CrossFit gym in an effort to get my fat ass back into shape. I’ve even resumed running a bit.
* Tackling my biennial flight review. I am, once again, a legal pilot. Woohoo!
* NOT surfing or skiing. This has been the year of no — zero, zip, zilch — winter in New England. No winter means no storms, no storms means no waves and no snow, no waves and no snow means no surfing or skiing. I was actually looking forward to experiencing East Coast skiing for the first time after a lifetime of skiing out west but…no such luck.
* NOT writing. I’ve actually jotted down some notes from time to time, and generated an idea or two that I think doesn’t suck. But for some reason, I haven’t been able to sit my ass down and start putting words and sentences together. I am ashamed, to be honest, and brutally frustrated.

And it’s that shame and frustration that has me posting this title-less and pointless piece of “what I did on my summer vacation” homework. I hope that by doing so I’ll prime the pump, so to speak, and get back to doing what some very kind friends have exhorted me to do. Namely: write, write and write some more…and more properly prioritize those other things listed above. The first step has been taken.

Home Is Where…

Whenever I return to Plum Island, I cross the drawbridge onto the island and there’s a palpable feeling of lightening in my shoulders. No, Plum Island is not Xanadu or any other vision of utopia, but it’s home, warts and all. And home just feels RIGHT.

But as good as it feels to be back on the island, it feels even better — even more like home — once I get into the water there. My preferred method for getting into the water is to surf, but even a swim or  just a brief dip in the water between suntanning sessions is enough to make me feel like I’ve really made it back to where my heart and soul feel comfortable.

Truth be told, the surf at Plum Island isn’t very good. The swell window is rather small, meaning wave-generating storms need to be in just the right spot or we won’t see anything in the way of rideable waves. Most of our best and biggest waves come from nor’easters, two-day (or more) storms that blow fiercely, pushing locally generated waves onto Plum Island’s sandbars and beaches.

And those sandbars are made up of very course grains. As such, they are very malleable and change dramatically with every storm. It’s not uncommon for a sandbar that has recently been the site of a decent break to get trashed by a storm you were looking forward to riding there.

On top of all that there’s the tidal swing, which is large enough that unless the swell is quite big, there’s too much water at anywhere near high tide for the waves to be rideable.

Because of these factors, most area surfers bypass Plum Island for the more reliable and higher-quality breaks in nearby New Hampshire. And they are high-quality breaks: on good swells, the points and reefs in New Hampshire can be spectacular, and on average swells the denser sand at Hampton Beach makes for more reliable conditions. That means Plum Island’s waves are typically uncrowded — which is a good thing.

On top of that, there’s something comforting about being able to wake up in the morning, reach from your bed and pull the curtains back, and see what conditions are like. It’s so easeful to don your wetsuit in your basement, grab your board and walk a hundred yards to the break — no cars, no parking, no towels, no changing on the side of the road…none of that.

In that kind of situation you come to know the waters and the breaks at home very intimately. You learn what swell and wind and tide conditions are going to combine into the best surfing conditions. And when you’re able to hit those optimal moments in an instant, when no one else is out — or even better, just you and a couple of friends who grew up in the same place are out — magic can happen. It’s fleeting, but that’s scarcity is what makes magic special.

I’m happiest when I’m in or on or at the ocean — any ocean — but I have ties to Plum Island’s waters unlike anywhere else in the world. I spent three years surfing Seaside Reef in Solana Beach, California, and while I got to know the nuances of the break I never felt like a local. I never felt like I could talk to the break and get a response. When I’m out at Plum Island, when I’m waiting for a wave or actively riding, there’s a dialog taking place between me and the Atlantic. It’s a comfortable, joyous, heartfelt occasion every single time.

I feel a particular affinity for Plum Island’s waters, too, because that’s where my younger brother died in 1985. He drowned while surfing and though his body was resuscitated and he hung on for another couple of days in a Boston hospital, I knew he was gone when I pulled him from the water. We spread his ashes there a few days after he’d passed and though I don’t feel like I’m talking with Scott while I surf there, I do feel like he’s part of the ocean I’m surfing — like we’re connecting still, 25-plus years later. And I do sometimes feel like he’s listening, if not talking back, when I’m on the beach or in the water.

And as I sat in the water at Plum Island yesterday having a spectacular session all by myself, I settled back into my discussion with the ocean, Mother Nature, the universe, and a thought occurred to me for the first time ever: I wondered if my 20-plus-year sojourn to the mountains wasn’t a subconcious escape from this place, from the site of what is without question the single biggest happening in my life so far, even though it was home. Yes, I’d continued to fancy myself a surfer and a sailor, and I’d surf whenever I was visiting my parents and waves happened to appear, but for more than 20 years I don’t know that I was ever actually in a place that felt like home, even when I was at Plum Island. It’s like I was fighting this place, not realizing that I should have been embracing it.

Yes, I’m very comfortable in the wilderness and the mountains — moreso, in some ways, than even the ocean — but it’s still not home on the level that the Atlantic at Plum Island is. I will say that Alaska is the only other place in my life where I’ve felt that sense of home; in some ways, even more since it was a home that came not by birth but as the result of a discovery I made on my own. But through all my time in Alaska I always felt like northern New England was where at least half my heart lay.

Did Scott’s accident take not only his life but also my comfort, my sense of home? Subconsciously, was I torn that this place that had always been so special to me had also wrought such pain and anguish on my life? Maybe I was running away from that anguish — and anger — for two decades, and it’s only now that I’m older and, theoretically, more mature, that I can come to grips with the fact that home is precisely where such tragic events happen, that the ties that come from such losses are precisely what make a place home for generation after generation. Not that my family is exactly Waltonesque in its manners or because it’s been in one place for hundreds of years, but there’s never been any doubt that northern New England in general, and Plum Island specifically, and the ocean at Plum Island even more specifically, was where my heart and soul always wanted to be. And as a result of Scott’s accident, I just couldn’t be there, not for a while, until I’d become several different people and lived several different lives over the course of two decades.

So surfing Plum Island isn’t just fun and it isn’t just thrilling, it’s also personal and spiritual and comforting. I don’t imagine I’ll ever find a break or an ocean where I feel that level of comfort, no matter how much time I spend exploring. I don’t know that I’m done living some of those other lives yet, but I do know where my heart lies. And getting to touch that feeling yesterday goes way behind sliding across a wave on a board. That’s how good the surf was yesterday.